Jeane Kirkpatrick

“”"..more fool than fascist..she appears to be one of America's own-goal scorers, tactless, wrong-headed, ineffective, and a dubious tribute to the academic profession to which she [expresses] her allegiance."

Jeane Kirkpatrick (1926-2006) was morally insane (or, if you're Noam Chomsky, the "chief sadist-in-residence") one of the most influential neoconservatives in the Reagan administration, serving as Saint Reagan's foreign policy adviser. Today she is most well known for unapologetically defending authoritarian governments so long as they took an anti-communist stance, her justification for this being that they weren't as bad as potential Marxist governments (this failed before, and she allowed it to happen again). The governments she supported most were the ones in El Salvador, Guatemala, Argentina, and even the Philippines. Also, despite her supposedly "anti-rebel" stance (on the basis that traditional dictatorships were better than new ones), she supported the Contras in Nicaragua. During the Falklands War, she favored neutrality due to her support of the Videla junta in Argentina, and clashed with Secretary of State Alexander Haig's pro-British position, which eventually led to her downfall in the Reagan administration.

In yet another horrifying twist she headed the US delegation to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, where she is best known for dying before she could convince an Arab delegation to support the Iraq War.

Kirkpatrick is known for being very quotable, though not in the way she probably wanted to be.

“”I don't think the government (of El Salvador) was responsible. The nuns were not just nuns; the nuns were political activists. We ought to be a little more clear-cut about this than we usually are. They were political activists on behalf of the Frente and somebody who is using violence to oppose the Frente killed them.

—Kirkpatrick on three American nuns who were raped and murdered on behalf of the El Salvadorian government.[4]

“”No idea holds greater sway in the minds of educated Americans than the belief that it is possible to democratize governments anytime and anywhere under any circumstances.

“”Americans need to face the truth about themselves, no matter how pleasant it is.